#16
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#17
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A bit of gallows humor: Mark Davis, the idiot son of Al Davis and current majority partner of the Raiders, is pissed that the A's are moving to Las Vegas because he says the Fisher ownership group made it impossible for him to get a new stadium in Oakland, causing his move to Las Vegas.
You have to know this sack of poo to realize that he has no idea how stupid he sounds (or looks, for that matter; he has the same hairstyle he wore at Piedmont High in the '70s).
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©2004 The Elefantino Corp. All rights reserved. |
#18
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I don’t really have anything against the majority of Vegas residents but I’d be fine with that area becoming a theme park of teams with crappy owners. The Sin City Knicks.
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#19
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After a long wait, the Eagles finally won a NFL championship in 2018, but that “pride” is nothing but an ephemeral high. The next year, one of the long-established hospital that served the indigent population closed, all due to some corporate shenanigans (new owner of the hospital was interested in the underlying real estate only). Someone who actually cares about the well-being of one’s city would gladly trade a sport title for a well-functioning hospital, but I guess too many are gaslit by the ephemeral high… Also, there is no comparison between European football vs American sports. The very point that served as genesis of this thread is almost completely absent. Take the case of Kroenke, who tried to gain whatever subsidies he could find with his NFL franchise (during the team's stay in St. Louis), but footed his own bills when it came to building a new stadium for Arsenal. That there is a contrast shows just how much of a cynical ploy asking for public financing is. And that’s before we get to the cases in Germany, where most teams are ran on the 50+1 model (as in, majority decision making voting shares are in hands of members of the respective clubs). Of the famous teams that aren’t, three had their starts as factory work teams, one is the personal project of an owner who made billions elsewhere and ploughed money into his hometown team, and one is a Redbull team. Unlike the U.S. teams, almost none of the established teams in Europe would dare to blackmail their local cities for handouts at the threat of moving away. Quote:
In terms of population, ahead of Oakland are Long Beach (CA), Colorado Springs, Omaha, Mesa (AZ), Tucson, Fresno, Albuquerque, Louisville, El Paso, and Fort Worth, none of which with any team in the big five sport leagues (NFL, NBA, MLB, NHL, and MLS). Austin has only a MLS franchise. But then again, your posts in this entire thread are argued from an emotional standpoint. Doubtful that any factual evidence will convince you otherwise. Last edited by echappist; 04-22-2023 at 02:51 PM. |
#20
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I'm no fan of a lot of public support of pro stadiums, but, I do know of at least two projects that have benefitted the host cities a lot. The stadium in Denver where the Rockies play (does it have a name? They all have a corporate sponsor these days, which is a whole other thing. Do the citizens who paid for the park get a piece of that branding contract?), and Camden Yards in Baltimore, which I frequent a lot. Both, to me, were worth the investment, transforming areas of both downtown's into very vibrant economic places. It helps that the Ravens play next to Camden. Cant beat that one two punch.
Is Vegas paying for this stadium? Why do they need it? Like there isn't enough of entertainment venues in that town. It's just one big nasty party anyway. Horrible place, if you ask me. I couldn't wait to get out. It's like everything wrong with humanity, besides war, in one hot, miserable town in the middle of the desert.
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It's not a new bike, it's another bike. |
#21
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It should come as no surprise that the private owners of the rest of the other NFL teams came together and have banned further public ownership of team franchises (the Green Bay Packers were grandfathered). |
#22
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I think the billionaire owners should pay the cities to play there. Not the other way around.
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I'm riding to promote awareness of my riding |
#23
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Worst owner in the NFL IMHO. Spanos could have done something great in San Diego if he was willing to partner with San Diego State.
No Spanos is a renter….. |
#24
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Despite its reputation as "sports town", Boston has a pretty good history of not using public funding to build sports complexes. When the New England Patriots wanted a new stadium, they threatened Boston that if they didn't help pay for it, they'd move to some other New England City. Boston told them to take a hike, so the Patriots asked both Providence and Hartford if they help pay for a new stadium. Both cities also said no, so the Patriots ended up paying for their new stadium themselves. The Boston Red Sox wanted to build a new stadium, referred to as "New Fenway Park", right next door to the old Fenway Park. Although the Red Sox would pay for the new stadium itself, they asked Boston to provide infrastructure and transportation upgrades (at the city's expense). The city was initially hesitant to do it, but then it came out the reason that owners wanted to do the project is because they wanted to sell the team, and the new stadium and other upgrades would jack up the value and selling price. So the city nixed it, and the Red Sox ended up upgraded the old stadium at their own expense. A few years ago, a group was created to put together a bid for the 2024 Summer Olympics. Although the group tried to hide who was behind the "Boston 2024" organization, it turns out that it "Boston 2024" was primarily setup by a group of local builders, who would be the ones bidding on the all the infrastructure projects that would have been required to be built to host the games. They never got the public to get behind the bid to hold the Olympics (in fact, public sentiment was generally against it, after seeing other cities left holding the bag for the costs), and the a formal bid for the games never materialized. More recently, the Indy Racing League wanted to put on a race in downtown Boston. There was so much local opposition, they never did get permits. But that didn't stop them from selling hundreds of thousands of dollars of tickets. Just after they passed the deadline by which they would have had to get the permits, the organizing group declared bankruptcy, and ticket holders were not able to get refunds. |
#25
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You just described the SLOOC and the reason the Games had to bring in Mitt to straighten out the mess. I know. I lived next door to one of the messes.
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©2004 The Elefantino Corp. All rights reserved. |
#26
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Careful now, some of us natives are sensitive about this sort of thing. But yeah, things change...money and growth to support professional sports have gone elsewhere.
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You always have a plan on the bus... |
#27
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"Why is it always smoggy in the South Bay? Because San Jose sucks."
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©2004 The Elefantino Corp. All rights reserved. |
#28
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Christie's whining was just an emotional rant for what is a business decision. |
#29
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Always a great experience. Cold, crowded aluminum bench seating. Great atmosphere. The relationship between the Packers and Green Bay and frankly all of Wisconsin and to some extent Michigan’s UP is unique in sports. They couldn’t be brought into existence today. The area is tiny and the media market very small town. Buffalo is a huge metropolis comparatively. |
#30
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Corporate welfare, indeed. I seldom agree with Cliff Christie, but he’s right on here. (FWIW, even Ballmer agrees he should be paying more taxes.)
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Old... and in the way. |
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